1The roots
-scribir,
-facer, and
-solver appear only in prefixed forms, e.g.
inscribir,
satisfacer,
absolver (although a verb
solver was attested). The adjective
suelto means 'loose, free'. 2The variant
-scripto is used in Argentina, Paraguay, and Uruguay. Verbs derived from the stems in the table above have participles similar to those of their "parent" verbs — e.g.
devolver →
devuelto, componer →
compuesto. Note, however, that this pattern is not followed by
corromper, whose participle is regular (
corrompido), nor by
bendecir and
maldecir (
bendecido and
maldecido; the forms
bendito and
maldito are nowadays only used as adjectives or nouns,
maldicho persists in
Judeo-Spanish). == Verbs with regular and irregular participles ==